As Washington D.C. Bureaucrat Richard Cordray and former Congressman Dennis Kucinich embrace the extreme in Ohio’s Democrat gubernatorial primary, the race has quickly become has quickly become a contest to decide who is the most far-left candidate to lead their party. ABC News has called the race a fight to prove “progressive credentials” as Kucinich and Cordray have made “a hard tilt to the left.”

This comes after the New York Times labeled the primary a battle of “left vs. left” as Cordray has embraced the support of radical Senator Elizabeth Warren and Kucinich has earned the endorsement of Bernie Sanders’ allies. Even the chair of the Ohio Democrat Party admits that candidates have embraced the radical wing of their party, stating that “he is not worried about his candidates eking too far to the left” as they have “have basically run as who they are.”
As Democrats go to the polls today to choose their nominee for governor, they will have to decide between two radical, far-left candidates who have spent months embracing the extreme. Whoever wins the nomination will have a difficult path to victory in November.


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